Otago Daily Times

Covid delays top 6000 in Southern

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

COVID has caused Southern health authoritie­s to cancel or defer more than 6000 procedures, including cardiac and ophthalmol­ogy work.

Outpatient appointmen­ts bore the brunt of Covidrelat­ed delays, as 5531 scans, appointmen­ts and minor operations have had to be deferred because staff and/or patients had caught Covid, were obliged to be in isolation or to care for ill family members.

Planned inpatient care, such as orthopaedi­c operations, also suffered disruption due to Covid — Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand Southern (HNZS) had to put off 541 operations.

The 6072 total Covid cancellati­ons from

August 15, 2021, to June

30 this year ranked the Southern region seventh out of the 20 health regions (the former district health boards) — a position roughly equivalent to where Otago and Southland ranked in terms of overall Covid cases.

Of those, 331 were planned outpatient care, the secondhigh­est in the country; and 2386 were other outpatient appointmen­ts, the fourth highest in the country.

Just over 2000 first specialist assessment­s or followups had to be cancelled, as did 629 diagnostic scans, such as MRIs, CT scans or ultrasound­s.

The data was contained in a table of data provided to National health spokesman Dr Shane Reti in response to a written parliament­ary question.

The cancellati­ons have added to HNZS’ already substantia­l waiting lists, which have become worse for many specialtie­s in recent months.

Interim district director Hamish Brown said decisions to defer treatment were not taken lightly, but they were one of the ways the organisati­on could continue to provide safe care to those acute patients who needed it.

Unlike a handful of health regions, Southern did not cancel any acute procedures due to Covid.

Mr Brown said the decline in Covid cases was already flowing through to a reduction in severely ill people with the virus who might have needed hospitalle­vel care during winter.

‘‘This is helping to ease pressure on the health system.

‘‘Additional­ly, with cases of influenza and other winter respirator­y illnesses also signalling encouragin­g signs of a downward trend, we are hoping some of this pressure on the system will also start to ease,’’ he said.

HNZS recently wrote to the directors of all health regions ordering them to ensure all people who had waited more than a year for either treatment or for a first specialist appointmen­t, be booked in to be seen.

As of July 31, Southern had the third highest number of people awaiting a first specialist appointmen­t (398) of the 20 health regions, and the most people who had waited for treatment for more than a year (856).

Earlier this week, a spokeswoma­n said it now had 331 people awaiting a specialist appointmen­t and 587 people still awaiting surgery.

‘‘Southern planned care which has been deferred includes orthopaedi­cs, cardiac, surgery, general surgery, ear nose and throat, urology and ophthalmol­ogy,’’ Mr Brown said.

‘‘Southern is working hard to ensure our wait list numbers are reduced and planned care is booked in.’’

 ?? ?? Hamish Brown
Hamish Brown

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